Top 40 Kiss Fm 2012 Guide
Number 10: Maroon 5 – "Payphone." Number 9: fun. – "Some Nights."
"It's time," Chloe would whisper, pressing the preset button for the third time. The robotic voice of the DJ would crackle through: "KISS FM. Your home for the Top 40."
"Tonight, we are young / So let's set the world on fire / We can burn brighter than the sun." top 40 kiss fm 2012
Mia looked at Chloe. Chloe looked at Mia. In the rearview mirror, the summer of 2012 stretched out like a ribbon of asphalt. School was starting. The Mayan calendar hype was dying down. Everyone was getting iPhones that didn't have a home button that stuck.
It was the summer of 2012, and the only thing that could cut through the humidity of a Midwestern July was the blast of "Top 40 at 4:00" on 98.7 KISS FM. For sixteen-year-old Mia, that countdown wasn't just a radio segment; it was the soundtrack to the end of the world as she knew it. Number 10: Maroon 5 – "Payphone
By the time they hit Number 4—Ellie Goulding’s "Lights"—Mia’s eyes were wet. The song wasn't sad, but the synth arpeggios felt like memories slipping through her fingers.
Number 1 was inevitable. It had been number one for eleven weeks. As the opening synth pulse of "We Are Young" by fun. featuring Janelle Monáe filled the car, Chloe pulled over onto the gravel shoulder of County Road 9. Your home for the Top 40
Her best friend, Chloe, had just gotten her driver’s license—a beat-up Honda Civic with a shattered cupholder and a CD player that only ejected if you hit the dashboard just right. Every afternoon, they’d roll down the windows, let the heat swamp the vinyl seats, and turn the volume until the speakers rattled.
The list was a time capsule. They’d scream every word to Gotye’s "Somebody That I Used to Know," even though neither had ever actually been through a real breakup. They’d pump their fists to Flo Rida’s "Whistle," a song their parents naively thought was about, well, whistling. And when Carly Rae Jepsen’s "Call Me Maybe" came on for the third time in an hour, they didn't roll their eyes. They held invisible phones to their ears and serenaded the cows in the passing fields.
She never forgot the list. Not the exact order, not the key changes, not the way the bass thumped through her best friend's broken cupholder. In the years that followed, whenever she heard one of those songs at a wedding reception or a grocery store, she wasn't an adult with a 401(k). She was sixteen, windows down, chasing the horizon with the volume maxed out, convinced that 2012 would last forever.